Books
by Ray NelsonTo
buy one of these books, click on the "Amazon"
or "Amazon UK" link under the title you want

The
Ganymede Takeover
(with Philip K. Dick) , 1967
Science Fiction. This novel tells the story of
a futuristic Earth occupied by alien worms from
the planet Ganymede. The last holdout against
the occupiers are a group of black revolutionaries.
The reader is treated to futuristic weaponry and
high-tech psychological combat.

The
Ecolog,
1977
A starship loses its way and sends down a shuttle
on a previously uncharted planet where scarcity
of metal has forced the development of a society
ruled by a masked woman, the Ecolog, who commands
the entire ecology

Revolt
of the Unemployables,1978
Technology has created a world in which a vast
population of unemployables are imprisoned just
for being jobless. A new religion arises among
the inmates and violence breaks out. A pacifist
is caught in the middle and forced to make a painful
choice.

Dogheaded
Death,
1989 & 2000
Historical Mystery. A wealthy shipping magnate is murdered
in an Egyptian villa; several members of his family,including
a son and daughter and his new, young wife, are seen
to have had the means, a motive, and the opportunity
to have committed the deed.
It is set in the first century A.D., in Roman Egypt,
at a time when the upstart Christian believers were
battling the established religion of Mother Isis/Father
Osiris-Serapis for converts.

Virtual
Zen , 1996
In a near future Tokyo the son of a pop music
superstar rebels against the values that drove
his father to suicide, but unwittingly follows
the same fatal path. In the nick of time he finds
a third path between modern life and death.

Books
by Different Ray NelsonsThere are several men out there who also
bear the storied name of Ray Nelson and are writing
books. While these books are undoubtedly admirable pieces
of literature, this Ray cannot claim credit for them.
Here are the ones we know about which this Ray did not
write:

The
Sterilization of Carrie Buck: Was She Feebleminded -
Or Society's Pawn -- by J. David Smith and
K. Ray Nelson